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2026 Ebola Outbreak — DRC Ituri Province

Active outbreak declared May 15, 2026. A novel Ebola variant not matching any previously known strain. WHO declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern on May 17, 2026.

Sources: WHO Disease Outbreak News, CDC, DRC Ministry of Health. Last updated: May 2026.

Current Outbreak Status

This page is updated as new information becomes available. Always verify with WHO Disease Outbreak News for official status.

Active Outbreak

DRC — Ituri Province (2026) — Novel Variant

Declared May 15, 2026 (by DRC Ministry of Health)
Location Bunia, Mongwalu, Rwampara health zones, Ituri Province, DRC
Causative strain Novel variant — does not match any previously known Ebola strain
Vaccine available? No — Ervebo and Zabdeno/Mvabea are not approved for this novel variant
Antiviral efficacy? Unconfirmed — Inmazeb and Ebanga not validated against novel variant
WHO classification Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) — declared May 17, 2026

Sources: WHO Disease Outbreak News, CDC Ebola

Risk to the United States: The CDC currently assesses the risk to the general U.S. public as low. Airport entry screening is in place for travelers arriving from affected regions. No cases have been reported in the U.S.

Check Current CDC Travel Notices →

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What Is the Novel Variant?

The 2026 outbreak strain is genetically distinct from all previously characterized Ebola viruses, raising critical questions about vaccine and treatment efficacy.

Why a Novel Variant Matters

The Ebola virus family (genus Orthoebolavirus) currently contains six recognized species: Zaire, Sudan, Bundibugyo, Reston, Taï Forest, and Bombali ebolaviruses. The novel 2026 DRC variant appears to represent either a new strain within an existing species or a candidate seventh species — genetic sequencing is ongoing.

This distinction is critical because:

  • Vaccines: Ervebo (rVSV-ZEBOV) and Zabdeno/Mvabea are specifically engineered to present Zaire ebolavirus antigens. They are unlikely to provide protection against a genetically distinct variant without cross-reactive immunity.
  • Antivirals: Inmazeb and Ebanga are monoclonal antibodies targeting specific epitopes of the Zaire ebolavirus glycoprotein. Their binding affinity to a novel glycoprotein is unconfirmed.
  • Diagnostics: PCR assays may need optimization for reliable detection of the novel strain.

Emergency Response Measures

  • WHO Emergency Use Listing process underway for candidate vaccines and diagnostics
  • Emergency compassionate use of existing antivirals being considered on a case-by-case basis
  • International research teams deployed to Ituri Province for genomic characterization
  • Ring contact tracing and isolation in affected health zones
  • Airport exit and entry screening for travelers from affected regions
  • WHO GOARN (Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network) activated
For healthcare workers in or returning from affected regions: Follow your institution's Ebola preparedness protocol. Report any exposure to your occupational health department immediately. Full Ebola PPE is required when caring for suspected or confirmed cases. See healthcare worker guidance →

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the 2026 Ebola outbreak spreading to other countries?

As of May 2026, the outbreak remains concentrated in Ituri Province, DRC (Bunia, Mongwalu, and Rwampara health zones). No confirmed cases have been reported outside DRC. The WHO PHEIC declaration activates international monitoring and border-health measures. Check current CDC Travel Notices for updated regional guidance.

Is the 2026 variant more deadly than previous strains?

The case fatality rate for the novel 2026 DRC variant has not yet been reliably established — the outbreak is in early stages and case ascertainment is incomplete. Historical Zaire ebolavirus strains kill 60–90% without treatment. Whether this novel variant is more or less lethal is under active investigation by international research teams in Ituri Province.

What is a PHEIC and what does it mean?

A Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) is the WHO's highest alert level — declared when an event constitutes a public health risk to other countries through international spread and requires a coordinated response. The 2026 DRC Ebola outbreak was declared a PHEIC on May 17, 2026. It activates accelerated vaccine development, travel measure recommendations, and mobilization of international resources.

Do existing Ebola vaccines work against the 2026 variant?

No. Ervebo (Merck) and Zabdeno/Mvabea (Janssen) were engineered against Zaire ebolavirus antigens. The 2026 novel variant does not match any previously characterized strain, so cross-protection is not expected without confirmed immunity data. The WHO has initiated an Emergency Use Listing process for candidate vaccines targeting this variant. See the full treatment & vaccines page →

What should I do if I recently traveled to DRC Ituri Province?

If you visited Bunia, Mongwalu, or Rwampara health zones in the past 21 days, monitor your health twice daily for fever (≥38°C / 100.4°F), severe headache, muscle pain, vomiting, diarrhea, or unexplained bleeding. If symptoms develop, isolate immediately and call your healthcare provider or the CDC Emergency Operations Center at (770) 488-7100 before going anywhere. Do not self-transport to an ER — call first so infection control can be prepared.

Is Ebola a risk for all travel to Africa?

No. Ebola outbreaks are geographically concentrated. The CDC Level 3 advisory applies only to DRC's Ituri Province. Travel to other African countries — including other DRC regions — carries no elevated Ebola risk unless confirmed transmission exists there. Always check CDC Travel Health Notices before any sub-Saharan Africa travel.

Emergency Preparedness

The CDC and WHO recommend that households maintain basic emergency supplies during active outbreak periods. These cover the essentials for a 72-hour self-sufficient period, plus personal protection supplies.

Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, EbolaQuestions.com earns from qualifying purchases. These are general preparedness recommendations, not medical advice.

Ready America 72-Hour Emergency Kit (2-Person)

FEMA and American Red Cross recommended kit with 3-day food and water supply, first aid kit, emergency blankets, light sticks, and dust masks in a portable backpack. The standard recommended preparedness window for any public health emergency.

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3M Aura N95 Respirator (NIOSH, 20-pack)

NIOSH-approved N95 respirators with ≥95% filtration efficiency. Required PPE for Ebola patient care settings. Essential household preparedness supply during an active outbreak when caring for a potentially exposed family member.

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Contactless Infrared Thermometer

Fever (≥38°C / 100.4°F) is the first symptom of Ebola. Contactless thermometers allow safe daily monitoring for all household members during the 21-day post-exposure window without physical contact.

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Disposable Nitrile Gloves (Heavy Duty)

Double-gloving with nitrile is standard in Ebola care settings. For household caregivers or anyone providing close contact care to a potentially exposed individual, nitrile gloves are essential barrier protection.

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BenzaRid Hospital Disinfectant Virucide Spray

EPA-registered hospital-grade virucide effective against enveloped viruses. For disinfecting surfaces, equipment, and care areas. Ebola is an enveloped virus and is susceptible to EPA-registered disinfectants.

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Aquatabs Water Purification Tablets (360-count)

Used by UNICEF and the Red Cross in outbreak response. Removes 99.9999% of bacteria and 99.99% of viruses from water. EPA registered, NSF/ANSI 60 certified. Essential for any emergency preparedness kit.

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Full Preparedness Checklist & Guide →